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According
to the dictionary, an artisan is a craftsman, a skilled manual worker
who uses tools and machinery in a particular craft. In fact, artisans
were the dominant producers of goods before the industrial revolution
changed the world. Unfortunately, in an age of smart machines and
computers, the term virtually has disappeared from the business
vocabulary.
But not at Santa
Clara, CA’s Phoenix Precision Plastics, Inc., a 4-year-old company
producing plastic components for semiconductor equipment manufacturers,
start up entrepreneurs and others.
“It’s one of
the things that first got me interested in plastics,” says John
Donnelly, president, co-owner and founder. “I found I liked working
with plastics because there is some artistry to it. It’s not just
a matter of programming and cutting and moving on. Many of our customers
want special things done to the parts we make. I consider myself
truly lucky that one of my partners, Gary Holst, is a true plastics
artisan. Gary has the ability to handle the materials in ways others
can’t. He calls himself a fabricator, and there aren’t very many
real fabricators around. It’s great to work with people like him.”
Phoenix
Precision Plastics offers two types of services to its customers.
“One of our services is very much like a typical machining job shop,”
Donnelly says. “They give us drawings and tell us the materials
they want, and we produce parts for them. But we also use our machining
capabilities to produce parts for the other side of our business,
which is fabrication and assembly. It is on this side of the business
that the artistry arises. Typically, in the olden days, fabrication
was a lot like wood working. You used a table saw, you used a router.
But times change. To be successful and compete, people in the plastics
industry have had to utilize CNC tools. Nowadays we’re asked to
deliver a high level of precision on plastic parts. "
The Art and Science of Materials
Sometimes customers arrive knowing exactly which plastic materials
they want to use, and sometimes they don’t, Donnelly says.
“Our larger customers have some highly experienced engineers who
know their materials,” he says. “They know which plastic will give
them the coefficient of thermal expansion they need, the dielectric
strength, the hardness or flexibility, you name it. On the other
hand some customers just come to us and say, ‘Hey, our parts need
to be precise, they have to be corrosion resistant, resist the pressures
of underwater diving, and they have to be brightly colored and shiny,
but we don’t want to paint them.’ That’s where our materials know-how
comes into play. We know and work with a wide range of materials,
including composites, polyethylene, polypropylene, Kynar, Teflon,
Peek, Delrin, acrylics and the polycarbonates. We know how to machine
and fabricate with all those, but if we can’t find the right material
for our customer based on our experience, we can turn to our distributors,
who constantly work with the plastic materials manufacturers. Their
knowledge is cutting edge. In any case, one way or another, we’ll
find an answer for our customer.”
Underwater Camera Case
As an illustration, Donnelly points to a problem his company solved
not too long ago.
“We have a customer who manufactures underwater cameras,” he explains.
“They had a problem. They were having parts manufactured by a traditional
machining job shop, and they were having significant failures. The
product was a waterproof case for their cameras, and the cases were
physically breaking. They were scratching their heads trying to
figure out the problem. Was it tolerancing? Was it a manufacturing
issue? They just couldn’t solve it, but when they came to us, we
did. They were using an inappropriate material for their application.
They gave us the job, and we’re in the process of working on it
right now."
The material required for the camera box had to have very specific
properties, Donnelly says.
“It needed a specific gravity that is less than one, so that it
is neutrally bouyant,” he says. “It also has to be able to withstand
very specific physical conditions, like underwater pressures and
so forth. We found the right material for them, and they seem very
happy.”
Rapid
Growth
Donnelly started his company with three employees. Today he has
eight people, including himself, hard at work.
“It was pretty tough at first,” he says. “We lost money our first
two years, but the past two years have been really good to us. We’ve
been growing at the rate of 60% a year so far, and it looks like
this year will be the same. What we did was the three of us worked
long hard hours even after things got going, and we used the money
we made to finance our growth and our equipment. We still work hard,
of course, but maybe not as hard. We’ve added people who are compatible
with our team, and who are willing to do what it takes to deliver
the quality we require. We also added some great equipment which
has immensely expanded our capabilities.”
Equipping for Plastic Fabrication
Like many startup companies, Phoenix Precision Plastics was on a
very tight budget in the beginning.
“We
bought a low-budget CNC mill,” Donnelly says, “but after a year
we realized we had made a mistake. So we went shopping again for
better equipment, more bang for the buck, you might say. That’s
when Paul Riley from CNC Solutions finally talked me into considering
Daewoo. I wasn’t sure about it at first, because we had been using
a different kind of control. The Daewoos have Fanuc controls, but
Paul convinced me, so we bought two Daewoos, a DMV 4020 and a DMV
5025. So far, they’ve been great. In two years, we haven’t had even
a single need for service. Compared to my first machine, I was amazed
at how much more robust the Daewoos are. They’re really rugged,
so I know they’ll last as long as we need.
”
Over the next couple of years, Donnelly sold off his original mill
and bought two Daewoos and an Anderson Stratos Pro router.
Daewoo
Puma 240 MA
Six
months ago Donnelly added a Daewoo Puma 240 MA to his production
arsenal.
“We bought the lathe with the milling option,” he says, because
we were getting more and more request for quotes for turned parts.
At first we actually figured out ways to do the round parts on our
Daewoo mills, but that became impractical as the amount of work
increased. So we went back to CNC Solutions, and they recommended
the Puma 240 MA. When we looked at the difference in cost for just
a turning machine or one with the live tooling, we were surprised
that it was low enough to justify the option. So we bought that
one. We immediately realized significant savings by eliminating
second ops and the time we wasted trying to figure out how to make
round parts on the mills.”
Machining Plastics
Machining
plastics is a different ball game from machining metals, Donnelly
says.
“On
some of the softer plastic or less accurate applications, we run
our machines at the limits of their feed rates,” he says. You can’t
do that on metals. Another thing that is very different is that
many plastics are damaged by the chemicals in coolants. So, we don’t
use coolants at all. We use air blasts to keep the tools and materials
cool. That causes our tools to wear our pretty quickly, but that’s
just part of the cost of doing business.”
Donnelly says his goal for his company is to have equipment and
people to do whatever his customers want.
“But
I never want to lose that touch of the artisan that we are able
to offer now,” he says. “We’ll use advanced technology, but we’ll
make sure it is operated by true craftsmen, people who care about
what they’re making.”
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Miguel Rodriguez, CNC
Operator, sets up Phoenix Precision Plastic’s new Daewoo Puma
240 MA turning center. The machine offers milling, drilling,
and tapping capabilities, large bar capacity, high speed spindle,
full contouring C-axis, rigid base-mounted tooling (BMT) system,
a heavy-duty 12-station turret, 0.1 second turret indexing,
one-piece torque-tube slant bed and solid boxway construction.
The equipment cruises through the company’s plastic machining
with ease, according to Donnelly.
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Gary Holst, partner,
and John Donnelly, president of Phoenix Precision Plastics discuss
parts to be run on the Anderson Stratos Pro router shown in
background.
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Variety of parts manufactured
by Phoenix Precision Plastics, Inc. of such materials as polyethylene,
polypropylene, Kynar, Teflon, Peek, Polyether and Delrin. .
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Jose Perez, CNC operator,
checks programming on one of Phoenix Precision Plastic’s two
Daewoos, a DMV 5025 3-axis milling machine. The company uses
the machines to meet the demands of its 60% annual growth.
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